By Ivo Mijnssen
The violence in Syria shows no signs
of abating and the country is quickly sliding into civil war. This week,
the battles between government troops and the armed opposition reached
the suburbs of Damascus. To date, more than 5,000 people have died in
Syria, most of them civilians. The observers’ mission of the Arab League
has failed to stop the violence, and its members are split over what to
do next. In the U.N. Security Council, Russia and China have blocked
any Western attempts to internationalize the conflict or even to condemn
the Syrian leadership for its violence against protesters.
Russia has been a particularly steadfast
supporter of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government. Its
opposition to stronger actions against the Syrian regime is founded in a
fundamental aversion to revolutionary change and strong economic and
geopolitical interests in the country.
The main goal of Russia’s Syrian policy is
to avoid a second Libyan scenario. In that nation, the Russian
government was split between a policy
of noninterference and support for, or at least toleration of, NATO’s
military intervention on behalf of the rebels. The latter position won
out when Russia decided not to use its veto to block the U.N. Security
Council Resolution 1973. With regard to Syria, however, the policy of
nonintervention has so far prevailed. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs
made it clear in December 2011 that it opposed any kind of foreign
intervention and trusts that “Syrians should reach an understanding” by
way of “national dialogue between the authorities and the opposition.”
The Foreign Ministry emphasized in November
that it considered “the maintenance of the unity, territorial integrity
and sovereignty of Syria as one of the key countries in the Middle
East” to be the primary task of the international community. Faced with
growing criticism of its position and calls for Arab League troops in
Syria, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov went even further. In mid-January,
he warned
that the policies of the West and the Arab League could lead to “a very
big war that will cause suffering not only to countries in the region
but also to states far beyond its boundaries.” For Lavrov, the
opposition forces in Syria are nothing but “militants and extremists.”
He quoted the recent terrorist attacks in Syrian cities as proof of this
claim.
Lavrov’s attitude primarily reflects
Russian cynicism about the results of the so-called Arab Spring. Where
others find liberation in the Arab world, most pundits in Russia see the
spread of extremism and instability. “The Arab revolutions of 2011 have
produced the rise of fundamentalist extremism and civil wars, which may
expand to become overt religious warfare with dire challenges to the
global community. The expectation for democratization of dictatorial
regimes in the region is sentimental and self-delusional,” writes Vladimir Belaeff, head of the Global Society Institute, in Russia Profile.
Russia’s concern for regional stability is,
however, only one reason behind its support for the Syrian regime.
Business interests are almost equally important. In the last six years,
Russia has invested heavily in Syria. In 2009 alone, investments in
Syrian infrastructure, energy and tourism amounted to $19.4 billion.
Russian companies such as Stroytransgaz and Tatneft are spending
billions to develop Syrian natural gas and oil resources.
In 2005, Russia also forgave Syria
three-quarters of its Soviet-era debt—almost $10 billion. President
Dmitry Medvedev’s visit to Damascus in 2010 resulted in a series of
economic and military agreements. A new regime in Syria could jeopardize
all of those deals. Russian fears are once more based on the Libyan
case: It is doubtful whether the new government in Tripoli will honor
the approximately $10 billion in contracts between the Gadhafi regime
and Russia.
Syria is also a valued customer of Russia’s
struggling arms industry. Current arms contracts between the two
countries are estimated at $4 billion.
In December, they signed an agreement for the sale of 36 Russian
fighter planes, valued at $550 million. That deal, along with alleged
Russian ammunition shipments in January, is undermining any
international attempt at establishing an arms embargo against the
repressive Syrian regime.
Russia appears unwilling to abandon its
decade long economic and military cooperation with Syria. The Soviet
Union and Syria established diplomatic ties in the first days of the
Middle Eastern country’s independence from France in 1946. Soviet
specialists built the lion’s share of the Syrian rail and oil production
infrastructure. Syria was one of the only countries that supported the
Soviet invasion in Afghanistan in 1979. In return, the USSR provided
Syria with generous military and economic support. Nine-tenths of the
Syrian army’s weapons were produced in the Soviet Union. Last, but not
least, the Soviet navy established a base in the Syrian port of Tartus
in 1980, its only naval base in the Mediterranean. Russian specialists
are renovating the base as part of the Russian navy’s efforts to
strengthen its presence in the Mediterranean. A pro-Western government
in Syria or the country’s fragmentation in a civil war would threaten
this important foothold in the region.
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